So, why is it called Christmas?
Have you noticed that it's only called Christmas in areas where Christianity held sway for a long time? It's like our language is shaped by history!!!
I am not denying that previous traditions existed, though never, to my knowledge, on Dec 25th - but Christmas is a Christian festival in the same way that Samhain and Beltane are Pagan festivals for their respective times of year.
And Hanukkah, and Diwali, and Pancha Ganapati, and Malkh, and Modraniht, Dies Natalis Solas Invicti (specifically December 25th), Yule, Yalda, Sadeh, Maslenitsa, Malanka. I'm not denying that Christmas is a festival for Christians, but it's also the cultural name for the midwinter festival in many post-Christian societies where people celebrate, but what they celebrate isn't Jesus.
Commercial interests have only partially hijacked the Christmas Festival, since we still have the Christian aspects of it being celebrated.
Which 'we' is this? You might, I sure as hell don't, and I know a large number of other people who don't.
Without those Christian elements we would never have had 'Christmas'. There is nothing wrong, in my view, in reminding people what the festival actually means - in exactly the same way that I would have no problem with adverts reminding people what Samhain and Beltane, Saturnalia and Eid al-Fitr, etc. mean for those who celebrate them.
Whereas I do see a problem with claiming that the festival 'really means' anything about Jesus at all. For me it means family, forgetting about work and day-to-day demands, and spending some time just revelling in the company of the people in the world that mean the most to you. If you want to add religious elements to your celebration, if you want to entirely replace that family stuff with religion, you go knock yourself out, that's your choice.
There is no 'real' meaning to the season, it's an opportunity for everyone to decide for themselves what they want to make of it.
To an extent, the fact that so few people know what these various festivals mean points to the way in which we as a society have become divorced from our cultural roots.
At some point, the trivialities of the past become unimportant - they might be interesting, but the details are irrelevant. If everyone gradually forgot that Hades was supposed to have kidnapped Persephone from Demeter and that the pomegranate seeds she ate are the reason for winter, guess what - we'd still have winter. Persephone is not the 'real meaning' of winter.
O.