Saints are given their special title usually because they had some particularly significant religious experience or calling (seeing visions, being told to feed the poor, having the signs of the stigmata, etc), and after death their body passes the tests of Sainthood (doesn't decompose as usual etc). It is unlikely any Saint (and it is very rare in modern times for a Sainthood to be bestowed) had "no" significant religious experience, though most are usually subjective.
Saint Bernadette did not start a religious community.
All religions are religious, by definition. Any time you experience a religion (or some aspect thereof) that is a religious experience.
Christianity did not even exist at the time of Saint Anne, much less religious orders.
Saint Michael is an archangel and founding religious orders is not part of his job description.
The Varieties of Religious Experience was created in 1902.
Religious Experience - book - was created in 1985.
No, Moses is not considered a saint in any religious tradition. He is a significant figure in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, but he is not venerated as a saint in the same way that some other religious figures are.
The Varieties of Religious Experience has 534 pages.
No, saint Sebastian lived and died long before their were religious orders. He was a Roman soldier.
Peter was not a member of a religious order.
No, she did not found a religious order.
Saint Abigail is not recognized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church or in most traditional Christian denominations. There is limited historical information available about her religious beliefs or practices.