The Great Order: Bold Foundations for Biblical Patriarchy, Masculinity, and Household Dominion

$19.99

Are you ready to break free from the confusion of modern culture and reclaim the ancient path of dominion, order, and righteous authority?

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The Great Order

Bold Foundations for Biblical Patriarchy, Masculinity, and Household Dominion
By Lord Redbeard

Are you ready to break free from the confusion of modern culture and reclaim the ancient path of dominion, order, and righteous authority?

The Great Order is not a self-help book for passive men, it is a call to arms for those who would build households that reflect the justice, power, and structure of God’s Kingdom. Rooted in Scripture, sharpened by history, and unapologetic in tone, this book lays the groundwork for a return to Biblical patriarchy, where men lead, women flourish under headship, and households become engines of dominion.

Inside, you will discover:

  • The divine design for men as lords, builders, and priests of their homes

  • A fearless defense of polygyny, headship, and Biblical hierarchy

  • How to cultivate a household economy, culture, and vision under Christ’s kingship

  • Practical strategies for raising children, choosing wives, and wielding influence

  • Why feminism, egalitarianism, and modernity must be rejected for Kingdom fruitfulness

Whether you are a man ready to lead, a woman seeking righteous covering, or a household seeking alignment with Heaven’s order, The Great Order will provoke, equip, and embolden you.

“As for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.”
(Joshua 24:15)

What are the critics saying?

Through his book, Lord Redbeard is a bold voice for Biblical patriarchy, household dominion, and the restoration of God-ordained order in a lawless age. A husband, father, teacher, and builder of multigenerational legacy, his book calls Christian men to rise as kings, priests, and judges within their own households. Rooted in Scripture and forged by conviction, his writings reject the rebellion of modern egalitarianism and reassert the ancient paths of masculine headship, female submission, and “covenantal” growth. – Arianan L.

 

The author is a bold, principled visionary, deeply committed to Biblical authority, masculine responsibility, and multigenerational dominion. He writes with conviction, not ambiguity. He does not merely believe in traditional values, he teaches to build systems around them. He is not content to merely criticize modernity; he teaches to construct an alternative: a kingdom, a household order, a framework of life governed by Scripture, hierarchy, and honor.

The author views the world through a covenantal lens. He is not interested in mere sentiment or surface-level faith but seeks to reestablish the full structure of Biblical patriarchy, complete with headship, duty, polygyny, household economies, and dominion theology. Because he believes it reflects the original design of God for His people. – WIlliam H.

 

So listen, I read The Great Order because someone in my group chat said, “Hey Greg, this seems like the kind of book you’d read while drinking.” Naturally, I took that as a challenge. I figured I’d get a few laughs, maybe quote a line or two during our next ironic theology meme night. But, uh… things escalated.

On page one I was laughing, by page 50 I was grunting, on page 100 I started journaling about legacy and land inheritance. Page two hundred: I stood up and told my wife, “We’ve been running this household like a democracy. That ends now.” (She didn’t blink. Just said, “Good luck.”)

Lord Redbeard writes like a Puritan time-traveled to 2025, stole a laptop, and started typing with fire and holy certainty. He talks about masculinity, dominion, and building dynasties like it’s not just possible; it’s expected. It’s honestly exhausting. I mean, I was just trying to finish my podcast series on Emotionally Intelligent Leadership. Now I’m Googling “how to plant a vineyard in hard clay soil.”

There’s a chapter on polygyny that I skimmed very quickly with squinty eyes and a gulp. Then there’s an entire section on Sabbath, which made me feel extremely judged for using Saturdays to “catch up on Netflix and mulch.” (In my defense, it was The Chosen, and the mulch was organic.)

By the time I finished the book, I had a beard oil subscription, three new commentaries on Deuteronomy, and a strong desire to cancel our Disney+ account “for the sake of generational purity.” I also might have referred to my son as my “young squire of the household realm” during breakfast. He didn’t correct me.

I still tell my friends I read it “as a joke,” but I also just built a cedar bookshelf to house my Redbeard Family Reform Library. I don’t know what’s happening to me. Pray for me. Or don’t. Just read the book and meet me at dawn with a shovel and a proverb. – Greg Thompson, Men’s Ministry Coordinator

Additional information

Weight 3 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 11 × 3 in

3 Comments on "The Great Order: Bold Foundations for Biblical Patriarchy, Masculinity, and Household Dominion"

  • I wish I could afford this book. If anyone can sponsor, please do send me a hardcopy at my address:

    Nasir , near house of Paarsad, Khari Kuwan Wali Gali, Mughalpura -I, Moradabad

    District Moradabad, UP (India)
    PIN code: 244001

    Mobile number +91- 8076018169

  • Finally someone said what every man has felt and every woman has feared.

    Every page dismantles the polite lies that have poisoned marriage, fatherhood, and womanhood. It’s not self-help; it’s structure. It’s not therapy; it’s command. If you’re tired of hollow platitudes about “partnership” and “equality,” read this and remember what dominion actually looks like.

    Men will find direction. Women will either find conviction, or conviction will find them. The Great Order belongs on every patriarch’s shelf beside Scripture and steel.

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