Dr. Ray's English Lessons

Is Christmas too Commercialized?

In this thought-provoking episode of Perspective Matters, hosts Sarah Chen and Mark Williams challenge the common complaint that Christmas has lost its true spirit to commercialization.
Sarah starts from a familiar place: frustration with over-the-top ads and consumer frenzy. But after digging into history, she discovers that modern American Christmas was largely popularized through commercialization in the 19th century—department stores, advertising, and marketing helped turn it into the widespread holiday we know today.
The conversation flips the script: what if commercialization isn’t the villain destroying Christmas spirit, but a neutral vehicle that actually spreads and sustains it?


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When Christmas Meets Commerce

  • SARAH: Welcome to "Perspective Matters." I'm Sarah Chen.
  • MARK: And I'm Mark Williams. Today we're tackling the annual complaint that Christmas has become too commercialized.
  • SARAH: I'll admit, I've been that person. Last week I saw an AI-generated Christmas ad and thought, "We've officially lost the true spirit of Christmas."
  • MARK: So you're in the "commercialization has ruined Christmas" camp?
  • SARAH: I was. But then I learned that Christmas actually became popular in America through commercialization. The holiday wasn't widely celebrated here until the 1840s, when stores started marketing it.
  • MARK: So commercialization isn't a recent corruption—it's baked into American Christmas.
  • SARAH: Exactly. Which made me wonder if I've been looking at this all wrong.
  • MARK: But people go into debt buying gifts. Companies manipulate emotions. For religious people, Jesus has been buried under wrapping paper.
  • SARAH: True. But what if commercialization isn't the enemy of Christmas spirit, but actually a vehicle for it? Shoppers are buying gifts for people they care about—that represents love, thoughtfulness, generosity.
  • SARAH: Santa Claus—used to sell everything from Coca-Cola to cars—is based on St. Nicholas, a bishop who gave away his wealth to help the poor. And gift-giving comes from the Wise Men bringing gifts to baby Jesus. Even commercial gift-buying has roots in profound generosity.
  • MARK: But doesn't commercialization distort that when people just check items off lists?
  • SARAH: Sometimes. But commercialization itself is neutral—it's a system. What matters is the intention behind it. When you walk into a decorated store, you can see manipulative marketing, or you can see a community creating beauty together. Both are true.
  • MARK: So it's about perspective.
  • SARAH: Yes.  Without the pursuit of commerce through advertising,  extravagant displays,  and lavish decorations,  Christmas might have disappeared--or at least been less popular.  I mean,  anything that helps spread the message of kindness and sharing,  how bad can that be?  Christmas being everywhere keeps it alive, spreading its values even in secular contexts.
  • MARK: So you're saying, the commercial transaction is just the mechanism.
  • SARAH: Right. And commercialization keeps Christmas alive and widespread. Radio stations play music about Jesus. Charities launch campaigns. The Salvation Army stands outside stores. Commercial activity enables real generosity and community connection.
  • MARK: So the spirit of Christmas was never separate from these activities?
  • SARAH: I wouldn't say that, exactly, but it's certainly true for the last several generations. In modern times, and I mean the last 100 years or more, gift-giving, feasting, decorating—all involve commerce. We live in a commercial society. That's just reality. I mean, even for hand-made decorations and gifts, you need to buy materials, which entails shopping. And stores will enhance their decorations to attract more customers. You can see the cycle, right? I mean, it's almost enivitable, is it not?
  • MARK: What about people who feel the religious meaning has been lost?
  • SARAH: Here's the crucial point, Mark—and this is what people really need to understand. The stores, the shopping, the commercialization—none of that can actually take away the meaning of Christmas. That's impossible. Because the spirit of Christmas doesn't live in stores or advertisements. It lives in our hearts.
  • MARK: So it's entirely personal.
  • SARAH: Yes. The meaning of Christmas hasn't been lost—it can't be lost—unless we personally lose it in our own hearts. No amount of marketing or consumer culture can destroy what you choose to carry inside you. When you buy a gift, you decide whether it's just a transaction or a tangible expression of love. Same action, completely different meaning, based entirely on what's in your heart.
  • MARK: That's actually empowering.
  • SARAH: It is! Two people can look at the same Christmas display. One sees crass commercialism. The other sees community celebration. The display hasn't changed—their hearts have determined what they experience. The complaint about commercialization often says more about the complainer's internal state than about Christmas itself.
  • MARK: So we're in control.
  • SARAH: Completely. The commercial infrastructure provides options, but we make the choices. Whether Christmas has meaning for you is entirely up to what you bring to it. You can shop at the same stores as everyone else, but if your heart is focused on expressing love and generosity, you're experiencing the true spirit of Christmas—regardless of what's happening around you.
  • MARK: This reminds me of that article about Jesus and Santa Claus working together.
  • SARAH: Yes! Christ provides the aspiring foundation—love, forgiveness, compassion—and Santa brings that message to life through gift-giving. Ideas need action. For many people, purchasing and giving gifts is how they put those values into practice, whether they frame it spiritually or not.
  • MARK: So commercialization has actually democratized Christmas?
  • SARAH: In a way. It's become a broader cultural celebration that anyone can participate in. And isn't that aligned with the original message anyway? Love your neighbor, care for others, be generous?
  • MARK: When you put it that way, complaining that too many people celebrate Christmas seems ironic.
  • SARAH: Right? The practical takeaway: when you're in a crowded mall, remember everyone there cares enough to brave the crowds. See people expressing love. The decorations are community art. And you're in control—set a budget, shop mindfully.
  • MARK: And most importantly, remember that spirit is internal.
  • SARAH: Exactly. The spirit of Christmas—love, generosity, hope, joy—lives in your heart. It can't be destroyed by marketing or crowds or commercialization. It exists in people who choose to express it. Other people can celebrate however they want, stores can sell whatever they want, but none of that determines whether Christmas has meaning for you. That's your choice, based on what's in your own heart.
  • MARK: So we've been blaming external commercialization for what's really an internal decision.
  • SARAH: Yes. The world around you is neutral. You give it meaning through your intentions and choices. If Christmas feels too commercial, it's not because of the stores—it's because you've allowed your focus to drift from what matters in your own heart. And the beautiful thing is, you can shift that focus anytime.
  • MARK: That's a powerful message. Commercialization isn't the enemy of Christmas spirit—it's a neutral system that reflects our intentions.
  • SARAH: And when we recognize that the spirit lives within us, not around us, we're free to engage with everything on our own terms.
  • MARK: Well, I'm afraid it's time to wrap-up today's podcast. Thank you Sarah for sharing your perspective on keeping the Christmas Spirit during this holiday season.
  • SARAH: Thanks, Mark. To everyone listening—the spirit of Christmas is yours to claim, regardless of what's happening around you.