Saints are not declared as saints until after they have died.
No. Saint Peter was born a man, and was made a saint. A human cannot become an angel.
Philip II of Macedonia was assassinated over 300 years before Christ was even born. He was never a Christian nor is he a saint.
Peter was in the court yard of the high priest when Jesus was on trial. Three times people approach Peter and accused him of being a follower of Our Lord. Three times Peter denied it. And then a rooster crowed three times and Peter remembered Our Lord's prediction made just a few hours before that he would deny him three times before the rooster crowed.
Genevieve died long before their was a canonization process. She would have been declared a saint by the local Christian community soon after her death in the year 500.
Most definitely not, as this would have made him around 400 years old. His date of death is believed to be either AD 64 or 67.
Paul preached the Gospel and died the death of a martyr.
She is a real saint. Saint Patrick drove the snakes from Ireland. He was made a saint after his death.
Cecilia was a pious and prayerful young woman in the early Church. She was martyred for her faith and died a protracted and painful death over several days but not before she made arrangements for all her property to be distributed to the poor. The early Christians declared her to be a saint based on her holy life and death as a martyr.
He was made a saint after his death.
She was canonized at St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City.
He declared Peter the "rock" upon which he would build His Church in the city of Caesarea Philippi.
Saint Joan of Arc was burned as a heretic but after her death she was cleared by the Church of those charges and elevated to the altars as a saint.