Patrick moved from suburban
Kansas City, Missouri, to St. Louis in 2002 to plant The Journey in the urban core. The church has seen unprecedented growth in the city of St. Louis and the broader metropolitan region. The Journey is now a multi-site ministry with six churches in Missouri and Illinois, including Patrick's hometown of Marion. The church has been scrutinized for its cultural engagement by the
Missouri Baptist Convention and received national media attention regarding one of its outreach ministries, "Theology at the Bottleworks," for being held at
Schlafly Bottleworks, a brewery in
Maplewood, Missouri. In his role as the chaplain to the
St. Louis Cardinals, Patrick regularly led chapel services and Bible studies during the baseball season. He was present for the players either before or after home games. Shortly after the end of the 2013 season, Patrick officiated the wedding of Cardinals pitcher
Shelby Miller. As a chaplain, Patrick was a part of
Baseball Chapel, an international ministry recognized by Major and Minor League Baseball, which is responsible for the appointment and oversight of all team chapel leaders (over 500 throughout professional baseball). Patrick was a vice-president of the
Acts 29 Network, and was a council member of
The Gospel Coalition, a group of Reformed Evangelical leaders from around the United States, including
D. A. Carson,
Tim Keller, and
John Piper. He has written for
Christianity Today and
The Leadership Journal, and contributed to The Resurgence blog. On April 13, 2016, it was announced that the Board of Elders of The Journey had removed Patrick from his position and required him to step down from all internal and external leadership positions. The reasons given were "pastoral misconduct" and a "historical pattern of sin". A letter from the elders made it clear that the misconduct did not involve adultery, but there was a violation of the "high standard for elders in marriage through inappropriate meetings, conversations, and phone calls with two women". In addition, the historical sins were listed and included lack of self-control, manipulation and lying, domineering, misuse of power, and refusal of personal accountability. The elders indicated that they had raised these issues with Patrick over a period of a few years, but he had repeatedly failed to address them. Patrick's name was removed from
The Gospel Coalition's council and the board of directors of the
Acts 29 Network. His disciplining was reported in the Christian press. In a conference in Las Vegas, in 2017, Patrick talked about the lessons he learned in losing his church. After a restoration process led by
Seacoast Church Founding Pastor Greg Surratt, Patrick joined the staff of Seacoast in June 2017 as a teaching pastor. He co-founded The Pastors Collective podcast with Greg Surratt in 2019. Patrick led Enneagram intensives as a coach through Crosspoint Ministries. He also worked with The Association of Related Churches (ARC), coaching pastors on building a healthy culture. ==Personal life and death==