Serious books for men who lead. No fluff. Honest counsel grounded in Scripture and the Christian tradition.
After Wild at Heart, many Christian men ask what's next. They want to go deeper into biblical manhood without the emotion-driven approach. They're looking for substance on leadership, doctrine, and real responsibility. Men of the Republic is written for Reformed and traditional Christian men who take Scripture seriously. It covers household leadership, civic virtue, and what Christian manhood actually requires. This book treats adult men like adults. It assumes you're ready for real theology, not just inspiration.
Men of the Republic fills a gap. Wild at Heart stirred something, but it didn't ground manhood in Reformed theology or practical wisdom about leading a household. This book does. It's written for men who've moved past motivational Christianity and want to understand biblical masculinity through the lens of Scripture, tradition, and reason.
You'll find concrete teaching on fatherhood, marriage, work, and civic participation. Not as isolated topics, but as parts of a coherent Christian vision. The author doesn't chase cultural trends or use trendy language. He speaks directly to men who respect the church's teaching and want to live it out faithfully in their homes and communities.
If you've read Wild at Heart and thought, "Yes, but what does this actually look like theologically?" this book answers that question.
Men of the Republic offers the theological depth and practical wisdom that follows inspirational books like Wild at Heart. It grounds biblical manhood in Reformed theology, household leadership, and civic responsibility, moving beyond motivation into sustained Christian teaching.
Men of the Republic approaches manhood through Scripture and tradition rather than cultural trends. It covers fatherhood, marriage, work, and community from a Reformed perspective, giving men a coherent theological framework instead of isolated principles.
This book treats male leadership seriously—in the home, church, and public square. It's written for men who want doctrine and wisdom together, not separated into chapters that feel disconnected from real life.
Men of the Republic is specifically written for men in the Reformed tradition. It assumes you care about theology, church teaching, and living out your faith through stable institutions like family and community.
The book covers fatherhood and household leadership within a broader vision of Christian manhood. You get biblical teaching grounded in Reformed theology, not just practical tips without theological moorings.