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.
Paul preached the Gospel and died the death of a martyr.
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.
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.
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.
He declared Peter the "rock" upon which he would build His Church in the city of Caesarea Philippi.