It is very important to adjust our expectations in marriage, because marriage is not built on the fantasy of who we thought the other person would be, but on the covenant reality of learning how to love, receive, and walk with the person God has joined to us. Scripture says, “with all lowliness and gentleness, with longsuffering, bearing with one another in love” (Ephesians 4:2), and again, “put on tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering; bearing with one another, and forgiving one another” (Colossians 3:12–14). That means from the beginning, we must understand that frustration often grows where unspoken expectations grow. When our spouse does not meet what we imagined, whether those expectations were reasonable or not, disappointment can quickly turn into irritation, bitterness, or contention. That is why premarital counseling, honest dating conversations, and simply spending time getting to know one another matter so much. They help bring our hopes, dreams, desires, goals, fears, past hurts, pain, and suffering into the light. In other words, they help us see not only the other person more clearly, but also ourselves more honestly. Youthful exuberance often does not yet know its own heart very well, and life has a way of revealing what we did not know was in us. So wisdom says, “Without counsel, plans go awry, but in the multitude of counselors they are established” (Proverbs 15:22).
Marriage, according to Scripture, is not casual companionship but covenant union: “a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh” (Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:4–6). Because that union is real, adjustment is not optional; it is part of becoming one. We do not enter marriage merely asking, How do I get my expectations met? We must ask, How do we learn to love one another truthfully, patiently, and sacrificially? First Corinthians 13:4–7 tells us that love “suffers long and is kind… does not seek its own… is not provoked… bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” That kind of love is not sustained by rigid expectations, but by grace, humility, and endurance. Scripture tells us to be “swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath” (James 1:19), to let “a soft answer” turn away wrath (Proverbs 15:1), and to be “kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another” (Ephesians 4:32). So yes, when partners are not as expected initially, it is not merely important but necessary to adjust expectations, because marriage is not the discovery of a flawless spouse, but the lifelong call to dwell “with understanding” (1 Peter 3:7), to submit to one another in the fear of God (Ephesians 5:21), and to receive one another as Christ has received us (Romans 15:7).
This is precisely why premarital counseling is such a gift. It gives us a safe place to surface the very things that, if left unspoken, later become hidden disappointments: views on work, family, money, affection, children, roles, conflict, faith, sex, communication, pain from the past, and dreams for the future. Counseling helps expose the expectations we carry into marriage, and many of us do not even know we have them until someone asks us the right questions. It teaches us that “Can two walk together, unless they are agreed?” (Amos 3:3). It also helps us see whether we are truly prepared to bear one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2), comfort and edify one another (1 Thessalonians 5:11), and seek not only our own interests, but also the interests of the other (Philippians 2:3–4; 1 Corinthians 10:24). Premarital counseling does not guarantee there will be no surprises, but it greatly reduces the chance that we will be completely blindsided, because it trains us to listen, confess, pray, and grow together. “Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed” (James 5:16). That is not only good counsel for marriage after the wedding; it is wise preparation before it.
At the same time, Scripture is realistic. “If you do marry… such will have trouble in the flesh” (1 Corinthians 7:28). Marriage is honorable (Hebrews 13:4), beautiful, and good, but it is still lived out by sinners in a fallen world. That means there will be misunderstandings, disappointments, pressure, and seasons of stretching. But trouble does not mean failure. Often, it is through tribulation that God deepens patience, character, and hope (Romans 5:3–5; James 1:2–4). In those moments, the answer is not to harden ourselves, but to return to the posture of biblical love: “And above all things have fervent love for one another, for ‘love will cover a multitude of sins’” (1 Peter 4:8). We are to stop contention before a quarrel starts (Proverbs 17:14), not let the sun go down on our wrath (Ephesians 4:26–27), and remember that “by pride comes nothing but strife, but with the well-advised is wisdom” (Proverbs 13:10). The wise husband and wife learn that contentment, patience, and mutual honor are not signs that expectations disappeared, but signs that love matured.
So I would answer the question this way: it is crucial to adjust expectations in marriage when our spouse is not exactly as we first imagined, because marriage is not sustained by idealized assumptions but by truth, humility, forgiveness, understanding, and covenant love. Dating, long conversations, and especially premarital counseling are part of God’s kindness to help us bring hidden expectations into the open before they become future frustrations. Through that process, we learn that a strong marriage is built “through wisdom” and established “by understanding” (Proverbs 24:3–4), and that when we trust in the Lord rather than lean only on our own understanding, “He shall direct [our] paths” (Proverbs 3:5–6). In the end, it is not perfection that makes a marriage last, but grace-filled love, a teachable spirit, and a threefold cord in which husband, wife, and the Lord are held together (Ecclesiastes 4:12).