@beamerbuilder1 never mind the critics; you enjoy your hobby. It's great when you see the results of your flying for the first time.
However, not everyone thinks the same and that's where the guys are chipping in with the comments. In any video, the action should be short and snappy. You could have improved that clip a million times by using a little editing. Actually the church is a pretty nice subject to film, but in reality nobody wants to see all the movements to get the shot in the first place.
I use a rule of thumb of 15:1. It takes about 15 minutes of flying to get 1 minute of usable material, especially if you are flying into position to get that 'right' shot or a nice close up. Slow pans, both left, right and up and down can add to any clip.I tend to limit my 'views' to 4 seconds in any direction (unless it's a really great shot) and edit a load together.
Sometimes the best clips are the ones that leave most out. I also find that after three years now, I'm getting reasonably good at it. I use a mac so I'm on Final Cut Pro X and it really is a fantastic programme for editing. You can do so much with it! I look back now at my early work and cringe at the mis-timings, the dodgy transitions and the lack of color corrections.
One of my favourite clips was done over a period of a year, filming a tree over the course of a whole year, then stitching it together to fit the four seasons into one minute. I'll post a link below. Lots of work went into that one, however I chose the wrong tree as the colours were not fantastic in the end. I'm working on a similar clip using a horse chestnut tree that should have better colours in the autumn.
Keep practising, and get some editing software! I'll bet if you redo that clip above, you could make it so much more interesting.