Rinnie…do not take offense where none was intended…I do not consider divorce a laughing matter…[SIGN]but it was you who chose to make the distinction of "there never was a “first marriage” since it never occured…not I.

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No I never said that. I said and I will repeat that in the eyes of the Church which also means in the eyes of God the Marriage did not exist. I never said the wedding never occurred. There is a big difference.
If both party’s went into this marriage and asked for Gods grace and received it, and continued to pray and go to God for assistance the Marriage would still be valid. But in order for an annullment to happen one or both party’s never had this full intent in mind.
Again marriage is a sacrament in the Catholic Church. If the CHurch feels this Sacrament was indeed valid in the eyes of God no annullment would be granted. In order for an annullment to be granted again the Church would have to be shown that no marriage indeed existed. You must understand what the word marriage means in the Catholic Church. It is just not just a wedding. If those vows were not honored then the marriage did not exist.
You cannot be held to a vow by the CC if you really do not understand or did not understand what that vow consisted of. If you can prove that you did not understand what you were commiting to you can be given a paper that states that. And the Church will not hold you liable to that marriage.
So how could there possibly be a first marriage if the person did not even understand what marriage is? Marriage is a vow to GOd and that other person. If you say that you really did not understand that vow how can it exist? How can a Priest or God or anyone hold you to something you really did not understand. So again the marriage was non-existant in the eyes of God. It therefore was not a first marriage. It was no marriage. Again it was not valid. So if something was never valid it cannot be first. It is considered void.