What would you call it then, cue?
What would you call a song written by a Wiccan, such as the lead singer of Red Hot Chili Peppers, not about Wicca, not about Christ, but about a near suicide attempt that resulted in a renewed commitment to life?
I would not call it art, but that does not mean it is not true or beautiful. I would call it a popular song. While it might fall under the category of the ‘arts,’ it is not necessarily art. It is possible though, that the lead singer of RHCP could produce something that is entirely consistent with our nature; the fact that he is wiccan does not disable him from producing such works. It could certainly hinder him from producing that work, especially if he has a perverted view of reality, salvation, etc.
I would equate this non-art-ness to a friendly conversation or a homily. Both can be beautiful and a real encounter with truth, and both can lead us back to or closer to God. But that doesn’t make them art.
There seems to be an understanding that it is an insult not to be termed ‘art.’ I beg you to resist that thinking. Art does not have a monopoly on truth or beauty. Some of the most beautiful things on earth, the miracle of the Eucharist or of the creation of a new life, are not art and they certainly are true.
As further clarification, let me give an example of how I believe rock influences individuals - a strip club. Now the human body is a very good and a very beautiful thing. It is also good to support (financially) others that they may make a living. However, the situation of such a place, the treatment of those goods (the human body) is itself wrong and sinful. Such places are an occasion of sin. Now there is a lot of good going on—every one who is in there has a pricelessly beautiful soul, loved in the eyes of God, their bodies are good (God created them good), many are seeking love (and God) in a pitiably misguided way (but that seeking God is a beautiful thing), etc. But the overall theme, because of the treatment of the gift of sexuality (that is, perverting this gift), is sinful.
Can some people go in there and not be made to sin against purity or modesty? Absolutely, but the Church recognizes that such a place, by its very existence as a strip club, is an occasion of sin, period. Now, is it possible for some to enter out of ignorance and not sin? Sure, but here an individual weakness (ignorance) hindered the common effect of this place on a human, just as individual strength hindered the movement to sin in the other example above.
I hope this example makes my position more clear. My main objection is not to the overt sins that are commonly associated with or often result from rock—drug use, violence, rebellion, abuse of the gift of sexuality, etc. I certainly object to these, but in this discussion, my obejction is to the genre’s treatment of human passions, a treatment which discourage reason and virtue and thus becomes, by itself and apart from these other sins, an occasion of sin.
(I am a horrible typist; I apologize for any errors.)