There is a pun in these names in the Hebrew. Oholah means "her tent", and Oholibah means "my tent is in her."[2]
The Hebrew prophets frequently compared the sin of idolatry to the sin of adultery, in a reappearing rhetorical figure.[3]: 317 Ezekiel's rhetoric directed against these two allegorical figures depicts them as lusting after Egyptian men in explicitly sexual terms in Ezekiel 23:20–21:[4]: 18
And she doted upon concubinage with them, whose flesh is as the flesh of asses, and whose issue is like the issue of horses. Thus thou didst call to remembrance the lewdness of thy youth, when they from Egypt bruised thy breasts for the bosom of thy youth.
There are many opinions available on a detail of translation. "'He went in to her as to a harlot, indeed they have gone in to Oholah and Oholibah אשח of wickedness.' The easiest and perhaps correct solution to the difficulty of the anomalous אשח in this verse is to assume the text is corrupt and emend it."[6] Most translators chose synonyms for harlot.
Catharism
In the divergent theology of the Cathars, the heterodox Christian movement thriving in the 12th to 14th centuries, Oholah and Oholibah inspired the belief that the Cathar Invisible Father had two spiritual wives, Collam and Hoolibam.
^Coogan, Michael D. (2009). A brief introduction to the Old Testament: The Hebrew Bible in its Context. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN9780195332728. OCLC243545942.
^Kim, Won Whe (2016). "Chapter 2: History and Cultural Perspective". In Park, Nam Cheol; Kim, Sae Woong; Moon, Du Geon (eds.). Penile Augmentation. Springer. pp. 11–26. ISBN978-3-662-46752-7.