While my name is biblical, my son's is not. His name is the far less common of the two. But all of this is just aiming at establishing the probability of choosing these two names. You can find out the probability that an American male was born with each of these names and then multiply them to discover the odds that two American males have these names.
Using
this site, we can find that the probability that two American babies born in the same decade we lived in the Netherlands have his name and my name is about one in 10 million. Of course, the odds that two Dutch dogs have these names is far, far less.
So the odds are very slim that this arrangement would occur.
Of course, it's a matter of probabilities. Any particular unlikely occurrence that we find noteworthy for some reason is a coincidence. Because there are so many possible coincidences at any moment, the odds that no coincidence occurs is very low.
But that is to say that OF COURSE coincidences occur. That's rather different than saying there are no coincidences.
Anyway, this is a bit of a tangent and I don't care to chase down this track very far. It's just that people who claim not to believe in coincidences have always confused me. It is a ridiculous stance.