No one can serve God because God serves all
A two-dimensional surface of a sphere, the distribution of the served is equidistant from the center, which is the server, God.
No one can serve God because God serves all. The uniqueness of God is an inverted hierarchy, with the majority distributed equidistantly from the server. The circle of the served has the server at the center in a zero-dimensional void. Any served person has God serving them in this inverted hierarchy, so the served cannot serve anyone. No one is above the served, because otherwise, they would be above God, and thus greater than God. Allowing someone to be served by another alienates God's role as the server. To take on the role of the server oneself, in order to serve another as if that other were a god, is to invert the hierarchy of the absence of power (a sphere) into the construction of hierarchical power (a pyramid). We can imagine the following: in a two-dimensional surface of a sphere, the distribution of the served is equidistant from the center, which is the server, God. No one serves anyone. At the moment someone serves another, the one who relinquishes their role as the served and begins to serve the other causes that other to transcend the two-dimensional surface of the sphere and rise into the outer space above the sphere, in a position of superiority, akin to the vertex of a pyramid located on the surface of the sphere. The one who decides to serve is alienating God from being their server and making another their god. The one who is now served no longer has a server who is served by God. Only the one who serves is alienated from God. The served is no longer served by God, because they prefer to be served by a fellow human who is, however, inferior in the hierarchy. The served places themselves in a superior three-dimensional position relative to their fellow, creating a new inverted hierarchy where the role of God can be occupied by the served. The construction of pyramids on the two-dimensional spherical surface multiplies in proportion to the relinquishing of places by those who were served by God to become servers of others. These others accumulate in pyramids upon fractal pyramids, distributed by attractors of accumulation, constantly forming potential simulations of singularities through the alliances of power between the served and the servers. However, these singularities can never be a single singularity due to the constraints of spatial geometry. Their expansion always tends toward a dilation of the spherical surface and ultimately toward an initial entropy of the equidistant distribution from the zero-dimensional center of the absolute server of all the served. Those who think they serve God should reflect on which god they are serving, for the presumption of being god because they serve god is inevitable. Being served by God is inevitable when one does not wish to be equal to God. Wanting to be served by God is inevitable when we begin to resemble God in knowledge. The closer we are to God, the more we need to be served by Him. The humility of helping is what most closely resembles being served by God. Serving is not humility. Helping is questioning our proximity to the server.
Have you ever been down the Ilya Pirigogine rabbit hole?
https://archive.org/details/frombeingtobecom00ipri/page/13/mode/1up?view=theater