While I think this is a perfectly reasonable question to ask, I don't think you should be overly concerned about this. Strictly speaking, you are correct that each test should only test for one thing, but that doesn't preclude your use of a data file.
If your System Under Test (SUT) is a simple URL parser/validator, I assume that it takes a single URL as a parameter. As such, there's a limit to how much simultaneously invalid data you can feed into it. Even if you feed in an URL that contains both invalid characters, and an invalid protocol, it would only cause a single result (that the URL was invalid).
What you are describing is a Data-Driven Test (also called a Parameterized Test). If you keep the test itself simple, feeding it with different data is not problematic in itself.
What you do need to be concerned about is that you want to be able to quickly locate why a test fails when/if that happens some months from now. If your test output points to a specific row in you test data file, you should be able to quickly figure out what went wrong. On the other hand, if the only message you get is that the test failed and any of the rows in the file could be at fault, you will begin to see the contours of a test maintainability nightmare.
Personally, I lean slightly towards having the test data as closely associated with the tests as possible. That's because I view the concept of Tests as Executable Specifications as very important. When the test data is hard-coded within each test, it can very clearly specify the relationship between input and expected output. The more you remove the data from the test itself, the harder it becomes to read this 'specification'.
This means that I tend to define the values of input data within each test. If I have to write a lot of very similar tests where the only variation is input and/or expected output, I write a Parameterized Test, but still invoke that Parameterized Test from hard-coded tests (that each is only a single line of code). I don't think I've ever used an external data file.
But then again, these days, I don't even know what my input is, since I use Constrained Non-Determinism. Instead, I work with Equivalence Classes and Derived Values.