Abstract:
The link between marital expectations and marital satisfaction amongst 
husband and wife in the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Jomoro 
Municipality was explored in this study. Participants included married adults
of the Seventh-day Adventist church from the Jomoro Municipality. Two 
research questions and two hypotheses served as the basis for the 
investigation. For the purpose of conducting the study, the correlational 
research design with a quantitative approach was used. The target audience 
consisted of all married Seventh-day Adventists in the Jomoro Municipality, 
which had a total population of 621 people. A multi-stage sampling technique 
was used to engage 434 married individuals in the study. A standardized 
questionnaire on marital expectations and marital satisfaction were used to 
gather data from the respondents. Data on research questions 1 and 2 were 
analysed using means and standard deviations. Data on hypotheses 1 and 2 
were however tested using simple linear regression and the PROCESS 
moderation analysis proposed by Hayes, using bootstrap samples. The study 
found a positively weak relationship between marital expectations and marital 
satisfaction. It was further discovered that although respondents had high 
levels of marital expectations and marital satisfaction, Seventh-day Adventist 
married individuals were not satisfied with their partner’s character, 
temperament as well as the interference of in-laws in their marriages. It was 
recommended that in-laws of married individuals should avoid excessive 
interferences into the marriage of Seventh-day Adventists married individuals, 
since excessive in-law inferences could result in marital dissatisfaction which 
could in turn lead to divorce or separation on the part of the married 
individuals.