That's why it would be viewed as an aggravating factor. A judge, undoubtedly, would view causing a disturbance and interrupting a baptism, a bar mitzvah, or another solemn religious service much differently than he would someone screaming on the corner of a busy street. That is, I submit, the appropriate place where that aggravation would be taken into account. The trade-off is that we have a Criminal Code with that section and other sections, and sections on theft—on theft from a clam bed, on theft of firefighter equipment, on theft of cattle—and then we get into an unwieldy code that has other issues.
I take your point, and I think your point would be of much more moment if there were no other way or no other mechanism in the Criminal Code to address the situation that you spoke of.