While I didn't see the context, it sounds like it was a regular, unproblematic, on-topic post that the author later edited to add a personal attack.
That personal attack was not acceptable, no matter what.
However, "rude or abusive" (RA) isn't the right flag to use in this case, because of what it can do, namely deleting and locking the post (which would also delete its answers). A mod can mark the RA flag as helpful, but it automatically changes to disputed when the flags are cleared (which a moderator needs to do to reverse any affects of RA flags). I think that a rollback would have the same effect too, at least on a post that hasn't yet gotten 6 red flags. Remember, disputed flags don't count against the flagger.
In other words, a moderator doesn't have a choice: the flag cannot be marked helpful.
The correct outcome was for the post to be rolled back to an earlier state, potentially with additional steps to make it stay that way. Someone already tried to roll back (twice?) but that didn't work. In my opinion, continuing rolling back yourself wouldn't be a good option because you expect it's going to be immediately reverted by the author, and it's possibly opening yourself up to hostility.
Therefore, the correct option would have been a custom mod flag explaining the situation, including the rollback war. The moderator can do the rollback and has a lot more options at their disposal to make it stick (anything ranging from locking to mod messaging to an actual suspension), plus more information about the user's history than you.
In fact, as a moderator on another site, I would appreciate a custom flag about abusive language that crosses the line like this, even if you were to resolve this via a rollback by yourself. No action may happen because of it (especially not a visible one), but it helps keep moderators in the loop in case a pattern does develop.
As for redaction, this usually isn't done for abusive content because it obscures what actually happened (the original content and how it was changed). It's typically only used on private information or when it legally has to, ie DMCAs.
With the exception of comments (which leave a trail only for moderators), users can see abusive content in various places if they choose to. However, the system isn't perfect in this regard; you're probably a bit more likely to be in the revision history than stumbling across a rejected abusive suggested edit. Even deleted posts are clearly marked when they're offensive, which I believe is ideal for this type of content. With the tools we have right now, it's best to clearly explain the reason why you're rolling back, since older revisions will be collapsed.