Tom, it sounds like you're confusing Unix permissions (the '777' you mentioned above) with 'rights'. Setting the file permissions on the script to 777 means that any user on the system can open and modify it - it does not mean that any user running it will be able to perform tasks with elevated permissions.
The purpose of setting ownership of a file (in your case, to root) is to restrict who can read, write or execute that file. There's a good explanation of how this works in the 'Notation of traditional Unix permissions' on Wikipedia
Unfortunately, Mike's right, and it's an extremely bad idea to allow anyone to edit and run a file which will perform actions as root. If you need a script to delete a file owned by root, make sure only the root user can run the script (set the owner of the .sh file to root, and chmod the file to 744 or even 700) and put the deletion call in there.
Hope that helps.