As well as answering the odd question on the main site, I am an active editor - I spend time trimming chat, fixing case, improving spelling and grammar, and so forth. In 99% of cases, my edits are accepted without quibble, and are understood by the author as helpful in making the post easier to read.
On rare occasions, I find that my edit has been rolled back, presumably because the OP believes their have "ownership" of their post in the way they would in a forum. Where a rollback is obviously wrong, I will generally flag for a moderator, who will generally agree with my edit and will restore it.
However, I have found one user who is putting "all the best" and "God bless" in a number of their lower-case and badly-punctuated posts, and they've reverted two of my edits (this one and this one). Elsewhere they've added remarks to the effect of "Jesus loves you :) I've been told not to say that on here BUT without Jesus my life ain't worth living" - thankfully that has been excised and has not yet made a re-appearance.
In each of the above rollbacks, my changes to fix case and apostrophes have also been removed. I reported this to a moderator, and received this response:
Frankly, I don't think this is worth arguing over. If they're that adamant about leaving that little extra wording in there, it's not worth the fight.
Now, my OCD-inclined editing is happy to give way over two posts, but I am worried that we are sending the message that religious evangelism in posts is acceptable, and that rollbacks to restore it are free to delete improvements to case, spelling, apostrophes, etc.
SUMMARY:
I sometimes feel we're losing the battle over post quality - an eternal September of "PLZ HALP ME!" and "URGENT!" and now "JESUS LOVES YOU" - and that it matters whether or not keen editors can rely on moderators to (try to) uphold quality and readability standards.
Would the community and/or another moderator offer their opinion?
I will of course give way if that is the consensus.
POST-DISCUSSION SUMMARY:
Thanks to all who contributed to the discussion. I will try to reduce the number of edits that accidentally focus on one user, and will attempt to soften the sharp edges of my editing remarks, even where posters are editing in material they know to be discouraged.
In addition, I'll consider rare edit-war rollbacks as part of the editor's burden, and will sometimes just downvote rather than always flagging for a moderator.
UPDATE APRIL 2016
Despite my original flag being rejected, another moderator kindly restored my edits, and a polite note was issued to the user, asking if they could stick to reference quality writing.
Unfortunately since then the same fluff material is being added, despite several people and moderators asking for some desistance. Given that I would be pushing my luck to flag this, I will instead try for a constructive dialogue in the comments.
UPDATE JUNE 2016
This user is at it again, even after a variety of community and moderator interventions. Note that I am not following him around - I have a variety of bookmarked trigger-phrase searches and he has come up on my radar again. Since I have expended my capital in editing posts from this user, and feel that flagging will probably be rejected, I will leave it here in case someone else from the community would like to edit.
I've noticed this post is related to this Meta question.