I've been reading the textbook Elementary Geometry from an Advanced Standpoint by Edwin E. Moise (3rd ed.). My problem with his wording of Pasch's Postulate, and then a subsequent problem which aggravates my confusion.
To start, this is his exact wording for Pasch's Postulate:
"The Posutulate of Pasch: Given a triangle $\triangle ABC$, and a line $L$ in the same plane. If $L$ contains a point $E$, between $A$ and $C$, then $L$ intersects either $\overline{AB}$ or $\overline{BC}$."
This could mean one of two things: Either that the line $L$ must intersect exactly one of either $\overline{AB}$ or $\overline{BC}$; or that the line $L$ must intersect at least one of either $\overline{AB}$ or $\overline{BC}$ (it can't turn around and leave).
When I look at the other resources (mostly wikipedia), I lean towards the former. However, in the same section, the reader is asked to prove that: "If $L$ contains no vertex of the triangle, then $L$ cannot intersect all of the three sides" from Pasch's Postulate.
If the former were true, the proof of this statement would be "Pasch's Postulate QED," which seems a little bit too easy. However, I've spent hours trying to figure out how to do it with the latter defintion (it could intersect both), but I just get so confused because my lines aren't straight. I'm completely at a loss.
So my questions is:
Which of my two interpretations is correct? Can this problem be proved without using the former definition?
EDIT:
I've realized (with the help of one Andre Nicolas in the comments), that clearly the former definition doesn't work because the line could pass through $B$. However, that leaves me with the same problem: How does one go about proving that the line does not go through all three sides of the triangle without passing through a vertex?