Pope Paul II (23 February 1417 – 26 July 1471), born Pietro Barbo, was Pope from 1464 until his death in 1471. I’m not really sure how God helped him, but I’m pretty sure that Pope Paul II wasn’t paying much attention to God, so you can probably just give that up.
Paul preached to many people in cluding pope, jesus, god all of this while living with aids
21 June 1963 to 6 August 1978 Paul VI Servant of God Paul VI 26 August 1978 to 28 September 1978 John Paul I Servant of God John Paul I 16 October 1978 to 2 April 2005 John Paul II Servant of God John Paul II {| ! width="18%" | ! width="5%" | ! width="14%" | ! width="18%" | ! width="15%" | ! width="12%" | ! width="23%" | | 19 April 2005 to present Benedict XVI |}
Well, why wouldn't he be? He is the head of ALL the Catholic Churches in the world.
By praying to God for their well being
he belived in love and care for other people and also belived in jesus and god
God's last name is/was "Pope", which is where the title of Pope is derrived. The Pope's are "children of God".
No the Pope is not a descendant of God. The Pope is the leader of the Catholic Church and is a very important figure in the faith. In Catholicism the Pope has a unique place of authority and is seen as a representative of God on Earth. However the Pope is not descended from God and is merely a human being.
First of all the pope didn't make Christ a "god." Christ is THE God, not A god. The pope had nothing to do with Christ being God. So the shortest answer possible is: He hasn't.
If you mean who will be the final pope, we have absolutely no idea. Pope Francis could be the last or there could be hundreds of popes after him. Only God the Father knows and he's not talking.
Yes, Paul Revere did very much believe in God. Of course, he was a colonist that came from England. England believed in God. England had a pope at top, which was pushed away by the Protestants during the Renaissance. So, the colonists very much believed in God.
Most recently St Elizabeth of the Trinity, canonized by Pope John Paul II.
Gautam Budha.