Heavier bullets can have less recoil than lighter bullets depending on the powder charge and muzzle velocity. A light loaded 147 with a small powder charge and a plus p 115, the 115 will have slightly more recoil....use a recoil calculator to give you a close idea of what recoil your individual loads actually have.
Peak pressures are reached quickly, slow powders have a mixture & deterant coating to slow down the burn, making the push last a few milliseconds longer, for a less abrupt push and drop off of pressure behind the bullet..."could" be an advantage, depending on the cartridge chosen. A 9 mm Luger has a very small capacity, and limited in powder choice burn rates, with respect to its capacity. Although there are quite alot of powders to choose from between the fence posts of usability. Bullseye to H110 about 52 powders to choose from, for a particular application, until load compression is ridiculous, to powder charges so small they do not cycle auto loaders...your load is somewhere that group of powders, for your bullet combinations, and what you desire, high velocities, subs, soft shooting, or maybe low muzzle flash for defensive use.
When I use 9 mm I never run anything but jacketed bullets at highest velocity for a particular powder, in loading manuals, for pistols. Then ARs are all Plus P loads. The 9mm is a wimpy cartridge, so why not improve it in a rifle that will handle, 38,400 to 40,000 psi loads, up from 34,000 psi max standard loads, when set up correctly.
For 147 lead there are plus p loads from Accurate depending on bullet, 4" barrel 147 Rain 7.0 gr Accurate #7 = 1,047 fps at 38,337 psi 1.160" coal. LC FP 6.7 grs #7 1049 fps 38 384 psi 1.145" coal...
Lead is not my cup of tea, I run 155 fmj at 1200 fps, or 147 gr HST at 1300 plus fps, from AR 15 16", for heavy bullets...I have run 185 gr bullets in 9 mm AR with diminishing returns, for such a heavy bullet, 155 to 165 gr are about max useful weight in this cartridge. Unless ya like 8 to 900 fps subs the 185 gr may be useful...my 9s and 380s are all at maximum effort loaded...as they are what they are...wimpy, but fun to shoot.