
Kailangan ipaglaban kabataang dalisay.
Project Dalisay seeks to safeguard the sanctity of the Filipino family and the innocence of our children by advocating for sex education that aligns with our cultural, religious and constitutional foundation.Project Dalisay is an initiative by the National Coalition for the Family and the Constitution (NCFC).The convenors of the NCFC are the following:Former Chief Justice Lourdes Sereno, Chair, PCEC Legal Advisory and Public Policy Review CommissionBishop Dan Balais
Convenor of the Palawan Bishops SummitBishop Peter Tanchi
Chairman of the Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches (PCEC)The NCFC was initiated by the following groups: The Philippine Council of Evangelical Churches /PCEC, Intercessors for the Philippines/IFP, The Philippines for Jesus Movement/ PJ, Nameless Faceless Selfless Ministry/ NFS, Touching Heaven Changing Earth Movement, International Christian Embassy Jerusalem/ICEJ, Christ’s Commission Fellowship/CCF
and is supported by a growing number of family and faith organizations.We aim to provide and promote alternative sex education that respects the divine institution of marriage, upholds the family as the fundamental unit of society, and ensures that our youth are seen as not only physical beings -- but moral and spiritual, first and foremost.
get involved
There are several ways you can help!
1. Like and re-share our videos on our social media channels. Follow our page and encourage others to do that as well.
2. Sign our Petition! Click the button below
3. Record your own version of our spoken word video "Magnanakaw" based on John 10:10 and tag us #projectdalisay
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Carlo Diño - 09990905890
National Director, National Coalition for the family and the constitution
Thank you to those who have asked how to give. Your donation helps this initiative to safeguard the innocence of Filipino children, and uphold the constitutional sanctity of the Filipino Family. Kindly send a screenshot of your donation to any of our social media channels. Thank you!
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We Invite You To Partner With Us!
"Stories constitute the single most powerful weapon in a leader's arsenal."
Dr. Howard Gardner,
Professor, Harvard University
Last year, Project Dalisay was birthed through a burden given by the Lord, utilizing the power of storytelling.The now viral Project Dalisay Video Series showed us what is possible when a message that is rooted in the Word of the Lord, and backed by the constitution, is relayed.
"And the LORD answered me: “Write the vision; make it plain on tablets, so he may run who reads it.""
Habakkuk 2:2
We want to equip those who run with conviction and fear of the Lord with a well-crafted story that can be told to both young and old.To remind us of the sacredness of family.To solidify our understanding of the constitutional protection over the family units.To open eyes to the spiritual nature of what is going on in the world today.
Jesus himself wielded the power of simple stories to tell the biggest ideas.
Stories disarm.
Stories open eyes.
The power of understanding the bigger story at play can change everything.
Together with a world-class team of Filipino creatives who are also followers of Christ, we are putting together a six-video animated series, each one 60-90 seconds long, told simply and beautifully in both Tagalog and English to show the "thing behind the thing".The videos will also come with discussion guides that seek to help spark meaningful conversations in the home.
It can be used by parents and students, Bible Schools, Sunday Schools and discipleship groups!It will build on the verse "Woe to those who call good evil and evil good" -- in this age of moral relativism and "You-do-you", we want to go back to the anchor of the Word. We will tell the ancient story of how what God called good, we doubt, and redefine good and evil on our own terms.
We want them to open their eyes to the war of kingdom against Kingdom.In our western counterparts, it's too late. Christians did not move when they could have.But the Philippines has legal and constitutional backing, and it's not too late! Help us.
This is for the generations to come. Partner with us to tell a story that could shape this nation. Message us below so we can discuss in greater detail!
Mainstreaming - what does it mean?
"Mainstreaming" is the key word, and it has a precedent that makes the whole law click: the Philippines already does this with gender. The Magna Carta of Women (RA 9710) forces every government agency to assess gender impact and set aside budget for it — that's "gender mainstreaming." The Family Mainstreaming Law applies that same proven machinery to the family: every agency, every policy, every budget line asks one question first — does this strengthen or weaken the Filipino family?
The headline problem: the Constitution commands it, but no one coordinates it
The 1987 Constitution already orders the State to act. Article II, Section 12 recognizes "the sanctity of family life" and commands the State to "protect and strengthen the family." Article XV, Section 1 calls the family "the foundation of the nation." The mandate exists. What's missing is machinery.Right now family policy is scattered across DSWD, DepEd, DOH, DILG, and a dozen agencies that don't talk to each other. A solo parent registers in one office for benefits, another for housing, another for her child's schooling — each program reactive, none coordinated. The result shows in the numbers you've already verified: marriage down 36% since 2004, fertility at a record-low 1.7, nearly 6 in 10 children born outside marriage, 1 in 3 youth raised without both parents. No single agency owns the family. So the family falls through every gap between them.The Constitution already commands the government to strengthen the Filipino family — the Family Mainstreaming Law is simply the missing machine that makes every agency actually do it, the same way the Magna Carta of Women made them act on gender.
The solutions, each tied to the gap it closes
1. Families at the center of policy effectivelycloses the "no one owns it" gap. A standing family-impact lens across all agencies, so a tax rule, a housing program, or a labor policy is checked for what it does to families before it passes — not after the damage shows.2. Support for marriage, parenting, and family formation
closes the "marriage is collapsing and nothing answers it" gap. Concrete formation support rather than only managing breakdown after it happens.3. Stronger child protection from abuse and exploitation
closes the "online predators move faster than fragmented agencies" gap. Coordinated enforcement and prevention for children facing online abuse.4. Coordination of family programs across agencies
closes the duplication-and-blind-spot gap. One framework so DSWD, DepEd, DOH, and DILG efforts reinforce instead of overlap or miss.5. Partnership with communities, churches, and civil society closes the "government can't reach every barangay" gap. The State works through the networks already embedded in Filipino life — exactly the NCFC and Project Dalisay model that already proved it can mobilize a nation.

