And from that time he sought opportunity to betray him.
All Commentaries on Matthew 26:16 Go To Matthew 26
Jerome
AD 420
The wretched Judas would fain replace, by the sale of his Master, that loss which he supposed he had incurred by the ointment. And he does not demand any fixed sum, lest his treachery should seem a gainful thing, but as though delivering up a worthless slave, he left it to those who bought, to determine how much they would give.
Joseph was not sold as many, following the LXX for it could not be that the servant should be more valuable than his Master.