Does he think he is above me?No -dogs don't think like that, the dominance/pack theory is outdated and has long been disproved.
Male dogs very seldom like puppies. Certain breeds are even less likely to accept them. Personally I would have gone for a bitch pup for sure, but even that might not have been straight forward.
Earlier this year I had a litter of pups where a bitch was going to a home that already had a male of the same breed. Experienced owner, high drive breed. The buyer came to visit the pup several times. On the day of collection she brought her adult male to introduce him to the pup on neutral territory. He went straight for the pup - I've never seen anything like it. She muzzled the dog and he still attacked the pup the second he had a chance. Had this been anybody else, I'd have sent them home without a pup. As it happened I had known this person a few years and trusted her. Before she even left here she was on the phone to several dog trainers/behaviourists (one of which is a friend and puppy buyer of mine). They told her it could be done so I agreed to let her give it a go -on the condition she did not take any risks so that my pup got hurt.
In a nutshell, for the first few weeks she didn't let the dogs near each other without one being caged. It was all totally reward based (food, not just praise), with the male being rewarded when he spotted the pup and did NOT try to get to her, whether he was inside or outside a cage. Eventually she and her husband started walking the dogs together, one each, side by side but not close together, then getting closer and closer. It took some time, months, but today these two dogs play together and are very good friends. But they have an owner who is home with them all the time and who was determined to not give up.
If you're going to keep this pup, you must separate them and put in a lot of hard work, slowly.