The museum is located off of I-5 at Castle Rock, Washington on Front Street near Mount St. Helens, United States.
"[2] The Andersons see the eruption as divine evidence for young earth creationism, and see their museum as a counterpoint to the many shops and visitors centers near Mount St. Helens conveying the secular view.
[5] Since October 2014, when the Andersons retired, the museum was directed by Paul and Geraldine Taylor, and renamed the Mount St. Helens Creation Center.
[3] Wilfred Elders, an emeritus professor of geology at the University of California-Riverside and a former chairman of the Education Committee of the Geothermal Resources Council of the US stated, "The Seven Wonders Creation Museum is an example of the 'best' and the 'worst' of the young-Earth creationist movement.
Constrained by a view of biblical chronology, young-Earth creationists infer that the seven days of creation occurred less than 10,000 years ago, and that the next significant event in the history of the Earth and of life was the flood of Noah.