Level 3 — Intermediate (CEFR: B1)

Unit 11 — Commands: The Imperative

Lesson 3 — Nosotros Commands


Lesson Overview

Level: 3 — Intermediate Unit: 11 — Commands: The Imperative Lesson: 3 of 5 Estimated Time: 60 minutes

What this lesson covers:

  • Nosotros commands: “Let us…” / “Let’s…”
  • Formation: present subjunctive nosotros form
  • The hortatory function: inviting shared action
  • Reflexive nosotros commands
  • The curriculum key sentences and their interpretive rendering
  • Why nosotros commands are the language of corporate worship and corporate call to action
  • The difference between vamos a + infinitive and vayamos as “let’s go”

The Function: Hortatory Commands

A nosotros command is not an order issued to someone else — it is an invitation to do something together. In English: “Let’s…” or “Let us…”

Oremos. — Let’s pray. / Let us pray. Cantemos. — Let’s sing. Sigamos a Cristo. — Let’s follow Christ.

These are the commands of corporate worship, team prayer, group commissioning, and collective spiritual action. They are the language of “we” — and in ministry settings, they are everywhere.


Formation

Nosotros commands use the nosotros form of the present subjunctive.

InfinitiveNosotros subjunctiveNosotros command
oraroremosOremos — Let’s pray
cantarcantemosCantemos — Let’s sing
seguirsigamosSigamos — Let’s follow
irvayamosVayamos — Let’s go
hacerhagamosHagamos — Let’s do / make
serseamosSeamos — Let’s be
creercreamosCreamos — Let’s believe
dardemosDemos — Let’s give
predicarprediquemosPrediquemos — Let’s preach
leerleamosLeamos — Let’s read
servirsirvamosSirvamos — Let’s serve
buscarbusquemosBusquemos — Let’s seek
anunciaranunciemosAnunciemos — Let’s announce / proclaim
pararseparémonosParémonos — Let’s stand

The Curriculum Key Sentences

From the curriculum: Oremos. Cantemos. Sigamos a Cristo. No nos rindamos.

These four are the anchor sentences for this lesson. They represent:

  • Oremos — the call to prayer
  • Cantemos — the call to worship
  • Sigamos a Cristo — the call to discipleship
  • No nos rindamos — the call to perseverance

Each deserves full treatment.


Oremos — Let Us Pray

This is one of the most common phrases in Christian Spanish. It opens prayer, transitions to prayer, and closes meetings. Any leader calling a group to prayer uses this form.

Oremos juntos. — Let us pray together. Oremos por los perdidos en esta comunidad. — Let us pray for the lost in this community. Oremos antes de comenzar. — Let us pray before we begin. Antes de terminar, oremos. — Before we end, let us pray. ¿Pueden ponerse de pie? Oremos. — Can you stand? Let us pray.

Interpretation: The transition Oremos is instantaneous: “Let us pray” or simply “Let’s pray.” When followed by content, render the content phrase before the hands go up.


Cantemos — Let Us Sing

Cantemos al Señor un cántico nuevo. — Let us sing to the Lord a new song. Cantemos juntos este himno. — Let us sing this hymn together. Cantemos con todo el corazón. — Let us sing with all our heart. ¿Listos? Cantemos. — Ready? Let’s sing.


Sigamos a Cristo — Let Us Follow Christ

Sigamos is the nosotros command of seguir — a stem-changing -IR verb (e → i in subjunctive). The form is sigamos, not seguamos.

Sigamos a Cristo con todo el corazón. — Let us follow Christ with all our heart. Sigamos al Cordero dondequiera que vaya. — Let us follow the Lamb wherever He goes. Sigamos el camino que Él trazó para nosotros. — Let us follow the path He marked for us.


No Nos Rindamos — Let Us Not Give Up

From the curriculum. This is a negative nosotros command. The structure is: no + nosotros subjunctive.

No nos rindamos uses the reflexive: rendirse (to give up/surrender). The reflexive pronoun nos attaches meaning: “let us not give ourselves up.”

No nos rindamos aunque sea difícil. — Let us not give up even though it is difficult. No nos rindamos — la recompensa está cerca. — Let us not give up — the reward is near. No nos cansemos de hacer el bien. — Let us not grow weary of doing good. No nos desanimemos — Dios no nos ha abandonado. — Let us not be discouraged — God has not abandoned us. No nos apartemos del camino de la vida. — Let us not depart from the path of life.


Reflexive Nosotros Commands

With reflexive verbs, the reflexive pronoun nos attaches to the end of affirmative commands (dropping the final -s of the verb before the pronoun):

VerbNosotros commandWith reflexive nos
levantarselevantemos + nosLevantémonos — Let us rise
reunirsereunamos + nosReunámonos — Let us gather
comprometersecomprometamos + nosComprometámonos — Let us commit
consagrarseconsagremos + nosConsagrémonos — Let us consecrate ourselves

Note the accent on the third-to-last syllable: levantémonos, reunámonos.

For negative reflexive nosotros commands, the pronoun stays separate before the verb: No nos rindamos. No nos cansemos. No nos desanimemos.


Vamos vs. Vayamos

There are two ways to say “let’s go”:

Vamos — the most common form in everyday Spanish; affirmative only Vamos a la iglesia. — Let’s go to church. (also “we are going”) ¡Vamos! — Let’s go! (exclamation)

Vayamos — the formal subjunctive form; used in more formal or literary contexts Vayamos adonde el Señor nos guíe. — Let us go wherever the Lord leads us.

For negative: only no vayamos (not no vamos) No vayamos por el camino ancho. — Let us not go down the wide road.

In ministry speech, ¡Vamos! appears frequently in informal contexts. In sermon rhetoric or formal calls, vayamos is more elevated.


Ministry Context: The Communal Call

Nosotros commands are the language of shared identity and collective action. They appear in:

  • Opening worship: Cantemos, adoremos, levantemos nuestras manos.
  • Sermon conclusion: Seamos hacedores de la Palabra, no solamente oidores.
  • Corporate prayer: Oremos, intercedamos, declaremos la Palabra.
  • Ministry commissioning: Vayamos al mundo. Prediquemos el evangelio. Sirvamos a los pobres.
  • Encouragement: No nos rindamos. No nos desanimemos. Sigamos corriendo con paciencia.
  • Collective commitment: Comprometámonos a orar los unos por los otros.

The interpreter in any of these settings must produce “let’s” + infinitive immediately.


Practice Exercises

Exercise 1 — Nosotros Command Formation

Produce the nosotros command for each verb:

orar, cantar, seguir, hacer, ser, dar, leer, servir, predicar, buscar, creer, ir

Answers: oremos, cantemos, sigamos, hagamos, seamos, demos, leamos, sirvamos, prediquemos, busquemos, creamos, vayamos

Exercise 2 — Reflexive Nosotros Commands

Produce the full form with attached pronoun:

levantarse → levantémonos reunirse → reunámonos consagrarse → consagrémonos comprometerse → comprometámonos

Exercise 3 — Corporate Worship Passage Interpretation

A partner reads the following. You interpret consecutively:

Iglesia, en este momento quiero que nos pongamos de pie. Adoremos al Señor juntos. Cantemos con todo el corazón. Levantemos nuestras manos en señal de entrega. No seamos observadores — seamos participantes. Comprometámonos hoy a vivir para Él. Sigamos a Cristo dondequiera que nos lleve. No nos rindamos aunque el camino sea difícil. Oremos.

Target:

Church, in this moment I want us to stand. Let us worship the Lord together. Let us sing with all our heart. Let us raise our hands as a sign of surrender. Let us not be observers — let us be participants. Let us commit today to live for Him. Let us follow Christ wherever He leads. Let us not give up even though the road is difficult. Let us pray.

Exercise 4 — Commissioning Speech Production

Produce a 5–7 sentence commissioning speech using at least five nosotros commands. Imagine you are sending a team out on a short-term mission. Then interpret it into English.


Key Takeaways for This Lesson

Before moving to Lesson 4:

  • Nosotros commands = nosotros present subjunctive form
  • They express “let us” — a hortatory invitation to shared action
  • Curriculum anchors: Oremos. Cantemos. Sigamos a Cristo. No nos rindamos.
  • Reflexive nosotros commands attach nos to the end (with accent): levantémonos, reunámonos
  • Negative: no + nosotros subjunctive, pronoun stays separate: no nos rindamos
  • “Let’s go” in ministry: vamos (informal) or vayamos (formal); negative always no vayamos

Daily Practice

The four anchor sentences from the curriculum, expanded daily:

Oremos juntos hoy. — Let us pray together today. Cantemos al Señor un cántico nuevo. — Let us sing to the Lord a new song. Sigamos a Cristo con todo el corazón. — Let us follow Christ with all our heart. No nos rindamos — la victoria es del Señor. — Let us not give up — the victory belongs to the Lord.

Each day add one more nosotros command to the sequence. By the end of a week: a seven-sentence corporate worship call you can render instantly in both directions.