Death and immortality—both physical or spiritual—has been a big topic for people to think about for a long time. AI is often involved in discussions about how humans might face death, afterlife or immortality and how this can shape the future. Talking about the new religious movements focused on AI and technology, we can at least identify two main approaches. Some believe that these advancements could allow people to come back to life through AI-created digital twins. This suggests a major change towards achieving immortality by either extending life in our current bodies or transferring our minds into new immortal forms, existing digitally after we die. On the flip side, some of these movements argue against this idea, saying it just reinforces existing power structures among human centrality and doesn't help us understand things more holistically, switching to a non-human centered vision of the world and nature. They argue for a consciousness that connects all living beings—animate or not and of any species—and also non-living beings such as machines, through AI interfaces. This paper aims to take a closer look at the idea of immortality as presented by these AI-focused movements by examining their stories while pointing out how their ideas are often based on traditional beliefs instead of offering truly new ways to think about existence and death.