I think your tempo is perfect. Most people DO play it faster. That gets on my nerves: something that should be pretty fast and people play it TOO fast like, "look how fast I can play this, I'm great!"
Anyway, I enjoyed listening to you play this, I wish I could have been there in the church while you played

For the main motive (3 sixteenths and eighth), I heard the last note of the slur carry over without a staccato or rest. It's probably the reverberant acoustics of the church, and I can't tell how you're pedaling it, if at all, without seeing you, but there were other places where the staccato articulation wasn't completely clear (ex: m. 56-66). Again, it's probably the acoustics of the room.
Back to the main motive: for my taste, I would like to hear less on the last note of the slur, which is the downbeat eighth note. It's interesting because we usually think of the last note of a slur as having less stress, yet here it's on the downbeat, which IS stressed. I love the the contrast of feeling forward momentum with the pick-up notes but then backing off with an UNstressed downbeat. Doesn't it also throw you off that the left hand contributes to this unstressed downbeat with the stress apparently being on the AND of beat one?
So instead of the typical ONE and two and three and , ONE, we get:
RH: and THREE and one (rest) and THREE and one
LH: one AND two and . . . one AND two and . . .
so together: and THREE and one AND two and THREE and one AND two and THREE . . .
Say this out loud while you tap your hand only on beat one; it's quite fun!
I'm not saying accent these, but just be aware of the intrest it adds to the sense of pulse. When the left hand plays it in m. 30, try NOT emphasizing the downbeat. Then it's a surprise when you DO in m. 34 on the sF.
Beethoven plays with this sense of pulse several times, like with the hemiola in m. 43-47.
I liked your dynamic change to piano in m. 67, but can you do it without the slight pause before the measure? I'm not sure if you added the hesitation for that specific effect, or if that was the easiest way to play suddenly soft, but I think there should be NO break in timing, but just suddenly soft. This is easier said then done, actually it's difficult, but it's typical of Beethoven to do this.
This suddenly soft thing also occurs m. 91. If you can keep the momentum going without the slight pause, AND play it suddenly soft, it would be very effective.
At the end, m. 384, be sure you don't add another beat after beat 3 before you play the D next measure. I like how you slowed down slightly on that chromatic scale coming down before that, but then m. 384 should still be ONE two THREE ONE, you played ONE two THREE four ONE. Maybe just a mistake, I don't know, but you said don't spare any comments

Great job really, as you can tell I love this piece. You played it very well, thank you for sharing!